Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 26, 1892, Page 5

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——= PULSE OF WESTERN PROGRESS B Majestio Natural Wonders in Valley and Oanon in Southern Utah, BIG RUSH FOR GOLD AND DIAMONDS Dtan Plucer Fields and Diggings - Developme: Ing - Samu ho's Diamond t in Wyom- ry of North- west News, Mr. Don Maguire, chief partment of mining and archaeology of the Utah World’s Fair commission, struck a h lead ders, grand scenery ard border titles while pursuing his explorations in gouthern Utah, The region whichdrew from him an enthu lotter pub- lished in the Salt Tribune, 18 known as Rabbit Ve hrough which courses the Dirty ull of which lic in Wayne county, with Lon ns the county seat. It isa mountanous region, weirdly interesting to the ex- wnd prospector. Below Rabbit another unnamed valley opens up, surpnssing the famous Yosemite. fwenty wiles further on, the valley nar- rows into n gorgo—a mighty crevice in the face of the Buck Horn mountains. The river descends through rapids, the mountain walls grow higher and the tomperature is decidedly warmer. succession of narrow valleys but a hundred feet wide, wrapped 1n etern summer, are met until the Dirty Devil mingles its waters with tho (ulnruln Mr. Muguire says he has visited the grand canon of the Colorado, and viewed the majestic beavties of Yellow- ptone paric, neither of which equal in rugged grandeur the section of Utah fust visited. Such wonderful canons, such awful walls of rock, such narrow rmm»s. thrill the beholder and provoke N river, nvolintary admiration for the mighty handiworic of nature. wild, weird, uncanny spirit 1n the ro glon. To the artist there is a play of colors in these mighty rocks that no land can sur| The sunlight comes down into these narrow gorges with such effect and the torrents of the pges have cut and worn the red sand ptone into pyramids, columns, arches rns on the most There are here places where the cem to gather from all the earth und riot, and again are feund lo- calities where the god of silence is su- preme—where the v illncss is ap- )nllin;v, There are leading out from the irand Waush narrow canons whose side assagewnys are but ten to thirty feet ut whose sides run up perpendicular 2,000 feet and two of these nurrow canons lead into mighty amphitheaters framed out of the sandstone. These vast amphi- theaters aro made lurger and larger through the years as the storms wash down their sides and carry the sand thus washed away down thro narrow gorge into” the Dirty Devil and thence down the Colorado and into tho Bea. A great natural bridge lies north There is a of the Grand Wash, a stream tributary | to the Dirty Devil. Tt shows a chasm 1,200 feet above the floor of the and forms w perfect avch over the gorge. It some of th ons where opposite walls ave perpe dicutar echo becomes perf fired re-echoes a cal instrument played within one these spots the music is 1 perfectly as the first sound, and the voice of tho wind as it plays avound theso heights seems to give forth notes not of this world, and the barking of n dog secms 1o awaken to life u thousand curs in the hills around. For the greater part of the year thisregion is dyy. butin uidsummer when at last the elements ave aroused the most terrible rainstorms wash down the sides of these cliffs and send a blood-red offering down to the Colorado. In this. almost’ unknown region con- taining 3,000 square miles, there is plenty of coal, some sulphur and fine deposits of A musi- Mineral Two sections of the great now attracting uncommon attention and drawing the usual influx of prospeclors | g costs for beating a board bill. —the dinmond flelds of Idaho and the placer ficlds of southern Utah. The rush to the latter has alinost depopu- lated wining camps in south-western Colorado and _northern Avizoni The placers v d less than a year ngo by named Wil- liams eastern capital, vd shipped to the plucers under the protense thit it was to be used in the developments of coal fields. The shipping point was Winslow, Ariz., and an old p:ospector named I'rench noting the style of muchinery followed the outfit, and came back to Winslow with a report that miles of rich yellow grounds, runuing trom $1 to #6 per pan, lay 250 miles to the north. In Albuquerque, N. M., nug- gets are on oxhibition ranging in weight from one to five ounces of coarse gold, and crowds of people are leaving their vocations and hu 2 to Utuh, The gold isdescribed as similar 1o thut discovered in Californin in 1849, ‘The location is in a fearlully rough country, It is about 200 miles north of Holbrook, A. T., over a rolling, sandy country, Qestituto of timbor or water. There nre nearer points in western Col- prado, but the country is rough. 'I'he find lies in San Juan county, Utah, but being on the south side of the Grand panon of the Colorado, is only accessi- ble from the Arizona side. Itis about thirty-five miles across the Avi aline. The elevation of the place must be 5,000 or 6,000 feet, and the winters there are pold and long. Water is plenty, the Ban Juan being anoble stream and, hay- Ing a rapid fall, will be casily wken out tor mining purposes. Old mining men predict trouble when tho crowd gets there and finds the best locations taken up by thesyndicate, and say that claim- jumping will flourish and many a life be ost over it, Reports from the dianmond fields of Idaho are not all of a fuvorable char- acter, and it is well they should not be. Exaggoratio is the barne ol new camps. Whilo dispatches and the local papers tell luminou stories of the fields and the genuineness of the brilliants, it should be borne in mind that midwinter in & mountainous region is not condue- Ive to uctive work. The ground is rozon to a depth of two feet, fierce winds provuil aud snow covers the ground, These facts go to prove that very little work has been doue, 80 that reports of discoveri must be taken with considerable salt. One correspondent hints that the dluylngq are not what they are eracked Kp be. It is alleged” that expert unz tells contradictory stories, that boomers of town lots and claims arve the wateh for suckers, and that the chiel boomer is a Texan who has acquired an unenviable reputation us a roper-in. People shall presently know whether the Idaho diggings nre a counterpurt of the gigan- tie Gulf of California diamond hoax per- pm.mu by schemers in tho '70s, If diamonds are found in Idahoitis of the de- | | ing of prehistoric won- | | at Ogden | leys unsurpassed A | few | 1 stupendous | rh the | :t, '\xul ashot | of | cchoed s | | dedicated o new chu tho | 60 | on | not improbable that the famous Doath valley of Nevada will be thoroughly prospected. Dan De Quille says the country ahows the bestdiamond indica- tions of any on the Pacific const There are not oniy blowouts of lava, but also floxible sandstone, beds of indurated | gravel, ironstone, hills composed of strata of red, blue and yellow material and other such indications a3 are found in the various diamond fields of world, Although prospectors have nodced tho flexiblesa ndstones, the beds of lava-covered gravel and the curiously | striped hills of this region, no one has thought of searching in it for precious stones—all the prospecting has been for gold and silver. & & Utah Rallroad Incorporation papers of the & Utah Irond company in Chieyenne a fow days ago. The route described is that surveyed by the Chicago & Northwestern years before the company stopped at Casper, It intended to connect the present line th the Central Pacific The route follows the famous Sweotwal and Green river valleys. the Hear river in Utah, and penetrates oil and conl fields and productive v by any in Wyoming Wyon Wyom- were file and Utah. I'he filing of incorporation papers at this season of the year is actented as evidence of the determination of the Chicago & Northwestern to construct the lonyg delayed road into the Salt Lake valley n.-w spring and summer. The Uiy f the Buriington in northern W \..mmu coupled with the fact that the | Ro "o roads have | k Island and Sunta il connection with the Utah me olis, are forces that operated in stir the Vanderbilt people to nction. Another factor is the development com- pany recently orgnnized with ex-Gov- ernor Campbell of Ohio at the head, to work iron, coal, oil and other lands, 100,000 acres, in e propused road. akings promiso great re- sults for Wyoming and Utah and will undoubtedly stimulate activity in other industrial lines, not the least of which is to_afford transportation facilities in Early next May Frank Fordyce, a voung stock bavon of Idaho, will at- tempt to drive from the conter of Idaho to Ogalle Neb, a band of 45,000 | sheep. The distance to be traversed by the animals 1s more than 1,000 miles, and ordyce hopes to accomplish the trip in about six months, He thinks ho will not while enroute lose over 1 per his gigantic flock, and he is that none will be stolen from him. The sheep will have to cross the ky mountains in their wildest part to ford several hundred small stre 1t will requ ten men to d be as o the services of only ve the sheep, but they by ten dogs, said to be of their breed in America. ill be made to save ght charges. will Do shipped to the Omuha and Chicago mavkoets. Salmon T G REchL packors are still discussing tho proposed associas tion. The general terms of the a ment have been ndopted, but the packers have not yet signed the articles binding thom to take a ce in amount of stock. The business of all the canneries on the Columbia from Astoriato the Willumette od and carried on by The business to be {of nine directors, is land be W by interests will h and the canneries shington two and spec The pack may limited to 46 Fixed [ be SIELEN i will be established for all the A Cass county farmer has slaughtered ninteen wolves this winter. James G, McBride of Pawnee City broke his leg while ting. Dr. Taylor, the Steelo City gentleman | who attempted to carve his neighbor, west are | Jlmer Campbell, was fined $50. Harry Hubbard was arrested at Table Rock by Landlord Ferrell and fined $5 &The German Lutherans of Oxford have h of their own. They now possess a substantial house of worship and a pursonag Mr. N. B. Barber, e County Journal, and D. A. lle of Aurora, are candidates for commander Soldier’s home at Grand island. Blackbird, an Omaha entenced at Pender itorof the Nance recently and battery, tried to commit | suicide by men, shooting himself in the abdo- His aim was poor and he was not ously injured. Ihll son of a farmer living 3 west of Oakland, and who is subject-to epileptic fits, after doing somo trading lost his way and it is feared that in one of his paroxysms he may.have frozen to death. Joe Campbell and a man known ns “Reudy,” who tried to skip out frora Crete without paying their board bills, wore arrvested and tined $50 and cost. While on the way to the juil one of the prisoners managed 1o make his escape. A muan named Tom Wilson got a team atu livery barn in Wilber recently, leaving with the liveryman another team and wagon. Wilson had beon sent by his employer with $35 togo to Wilber for a load of bricks, but he failed o re- turn. The meeting nt the Church of Christ at Arapahoe, conducted by Lvaongelist S, A, }(cdgus‘ still continues with un- abated interest, church have twenty-one, all three. At Oxford, Sherman Ynger had a fine black laprobe stolen from his buggy. The previous evening a similar article vns swiped from a vehicle belonging to homas Sheffrey. A week or s0 ago some thief mado uwu) with a brand new The additions to the alraady amounted to heads of families bav | bridle. John N, llmslor of Pawnee City has sold his interest in the Republican pub® lished at that city to Roy D. Hassler, wiho will take possession of the office January 1, next. Mr. Hassler is ono of the oldest and best newspaper men in the state, aud his rotirement on account of ill health is & source of regret to his friends. At u musked ball given at recently u light by some drunken ruffi- ans broke out behind the scenery which ten or twelve persons par pated. Kunives were freely used. Jobn Hill, Dick May and several others were soverely out up and otherwise bruised in the melee, The city marshal over- powered the ruffians and peace was re- stored. Hon. Paul sSchminke, one of the best known men of Nebraska, und who has several times represented Otoe county in the legislature and is at present mayor of Nebraska City, is very sick. His ailment is a complication of futty degeneration of the heartand Bright's disease, the latter an outgrowth of the former. It ennnot be told how long the the | istruction work | | ors is sot for Janus tho | | enne. | the timber to the depot master. From Ogal- | | ent has boen tendered Indian, | Hubbell | THE OMATA DAILY BE honored mayor’s life may be spared undor thess tarrible afiictions. Sonth Dakota, The Harvoy Peak Tin company patron of Wyoming coal. Denver capitalists have invested 75, 000 in minos in Sheeptail gulch. The newly formed Green Mountain | Mining company will work the mines near Sundance. Tho semi-monthly shipment of from the Homest mine and Golden Reward :mu‘wr amounted $150,000, is a wold the to Organization 18 the order of thes day The Association of the Prospector the Black Hills is the latest. The ob- ject is mutual benefit, advancement and pecuniary support. The grade of the Aberdeen & Plerre railroad is finisbed. [t is reasonably certain that the rozd will be pushed to completion next year: Wealthy castern men are now interested in the road The legislature will be asked to make amends for World’s tair neglect by ap- propriating 350,000 for the state exhibit So far $10,022, secured by public sub- scription, bas been exponded on the state building. Wyoming. The trial of the Johnson county ry 2, at Choyenne The Asbestos Mining company, cap- ital $800,000, will operate near Casper. Out of the thirtcen counties in the raid- | state of Wyoming thero was uot a man elocted to the oftice of county superin- tendent of schools. Sheriff Angus is ready to bet 3100 to #1 that Bliss, the horse lifter and desporado, is nov dead nor sleoping. 1t was recently reported that he was killed in a fight with ofticors. During the first half of December the Union Pacific Coal company shipped 4,171 cars of coal from Iock Springs, and even then work was svspended for throe days owing to a shortige in cars. | Prank Case, the voung horse thief who escaped from t! horidan county jail at Sheridan last week, was captured in the hills about twenty miles from the town. Both his feet and ono hand were badly frozen. | The altitudinous atmosphore of Lav- | 1 amie affected the gray matter of Jos Costello, u passenger on the Over Ho was found wandering aimlessly tho byways of the town, his poc filled “with cash and checks to the | amount of J00. Ben Blanchard didnot work as smooth a game ns did a bogus cripple in Chey The intter hitched a chunk of wood to his 1 borrowed a cruteh and worked the charitabl e secured snough to ride out of town, but donated | A 15-year-old boy, while mding horse- back over the prairie in the Sybille country the other day, suddenly camo upon o monster wildeat that was crouch- | ing among the bushes along the route. Instead of trying to get away from it | tho brave young lad got off 'his horse | und proceded to pelt the animal with | rocks and finally succeeded in killing it Turee firo engine houses built in Salt Lalke. The governor of Idaho recommends a tax on the net product of mines. The revival of the Northwe tension provoked Salt Lakers to cheers. The Idaho supreme court declares that tax collectors are limited to $3,000 | in fees por annum, ( harley Y ung, o (Inn:unnn, !llmlnlul are to be | Imul or l\mll‘:v \\llhu\lt 5 U7 e oapttallyy e Badly now ina frozen feot. A roundup of cc rebrush twenty-fi of Idaho’s capital. Thirty were tured. The ins of the animals are valuable for winter coats. The Boiso newspaper war goes on right merrily. The Mail eli'nr landed an uppercut the ovher day by referring | 1o his contemporary on the Statesman as “the boiler-beilied beauty up the street.” The Salt Lake Tribune paid an elo- yotes was made in the miles southeast quent and touching tribute to the mem- ory of James G. Blaine. Lditor Good- man made no mistake when he decided that the obituary was too good to keep untii the Plumed Knignt had passed away. Montann The official canvass of Montana’s vote gives Harrison a plurality of 1,270. The flonting debt of Great £80,000, drawing 7 per debt amounts to $100,000. 1t is veported in Montana that A. W. Lyman of the Helena the position of by Presidgent Cleve- t. The bonded privato secretar land. Reports from the northern country represent a bad affair The snow is scarce. [n the southern in good condition. Reports of the properties are put is about onc-half the usual quantit but new drifts are being opened, while the mills are running nearly full- handed on surplus ore. A Great I"alls dispatch states that the latest reports from the Fort Belknap Indian agency state that the log cabin in which the Indian who Kkilled Big Mouth had barricaded himsell with some of his Indians, was stormed by the indian police, and 1n the fight the mur- derer and one of the other Indians wore killed, Agent Simons i3 doing nicely, and the trouble is considered at an end 4 cattle condition of range stocl is hut down of Anaconda exaggerated., Along the Const, The returns of the salmon pack of British Columbia for the season of 1892 show a total of 221,797 cases, as compared Is It Worth the Chance? If you are sincere in encours aging honest manufacturers in giving you pure preparations instead of worthless ones, at fair instead of seemingly cheap price, is it worth the chance to purchase the dozen and one adulterated extracts on the market instead of Dr. Price’s Delicious Flavoring Extracts of Lemon, Orange, Vanilla, cte., that impart the natural flavor of the fruit, and are endorsed for their purity, strength and economy? A trial of Dr. Price’s Delicious Flavoring Extracts will prove a great movement towards good eating, active digestion end happy homes, | population, and that tho northern coun- | that two out of three of the now sottle | fitting uniform wear either | have | well-fed | described ns a corselet, itis much longer | I.|l|s is | Major | Independ- | deep and feed | The out- | with 812,211 onsos for Wb senson of 1801 n decrense for 1992 of ! 1414 cases, Seattle s putting’ ¥4 tresh tuckors preliminary to celebfd¥ing the advent of the Groat Northers. The Puget sound country and Oregon are enveioped in sugw from one and o half to three feet in depth. The tax rolls from all_the counties of the state show the total value of the taxable property of the state to be $126,- 000,000, against $128,000,000 last year. The Oregon Pacifia railronds, boats, etc, are advertised to be res on January 16, 1803, No bid less than 1,250,000 ‘for the property will bo re- ceived. stoam- The contracts for the extension of the Spokans Falls & Northern railroad from Northport tothe international boundary | has been awarded and work begun. This is the first, step iu the proposed conneetion of Spokano with the Cana- dian Pacific, which will give the city the benefit of the travel over a fourth transconti ul line, A monster cougar attacked a rancher named Nesbitt, living at Chain Lake, Snohomish county, Wash, He would probably have made a meal for the wild beast had it not been for two travelers who heard his esfor help. They had no guns and the beast, though afraid to attack nli three, followed them a dist- | anco of two miles along the trail. Ina paper road before the Board of | Peade of San Francisco, General Chip- man of Ited Bluff showed that seven southern counties had received 61 pur cent. of the entire increase in rural ties had remained almost at a st for ten years mannly to th counties | duvide terms. ndstill 'I'his result ne attributed fact that in the northern r landnolders refused to sub- their tracts and sell on easy Another nificant fact who have come to this te in the lust decade have gone 1nto cities and towns of over 3,000 inhabitants. One-third of the wholo 436 new settlers may be found in San [ cisco, Oakland and Los Angeles, Draw Your Own:Conclusion. of ll\u [ Co., this to say of Chumberlain’s Cough I(- mody: | “Tused it for @ severo cold and cough und | obtained immediate ve! In the Fort Redwood Co.’s store we have sold quantities of Chamberlain’s medi- 1or sale by druggists. Something About Men's Corsets, Philadelphia mes: The idea of n weuring corsets is nota new one. rman army officers wear them ns o matter of course. Inglish ofiicers of k regiments which sporta tight- corsets or their coats whaleboned to fit snugly. Iam not, however, alluding to these pardonable instances where it is hardly possible to avoid some such aid to imposing grand tenu, but to the fact that corset wearing among fashionable young men,and some naughty, wicked old ones, is not only becoming daily more popular, but that a well known Bond street house is'making a fortune by its artificial attenuations of figures, whosé owners disdain the robust and appearance . of well-dined Britons, The man’s corset a la_mode is better in proportion than that affected by fem- ininity, and fits well down to the hips and under the shoulders. With the present mode of wearing the frock cont open there is not much chance to dis- play the skill of the corsetier to advan- tl’)’ hateful. Nothing but clothes, paint, di with something tha but it isn’t safe, Bewa tation, be honest—send it BRIGHTNESS sorders of the Ston , Loss of Appetit | Indu.,-.nflnu Biliousn liable to contract discase. 3 uxeacure for this co ore 8Eronuth L o stoms Sold®y all drugilsts, oF mu it of price) HORACE CHASE( orE WOOLSON: By Constance Fexi Other Features of The Romance in the Life of Hefty Burke A Story. By Ricuskp HAroiNG Davis With [fustrations by C. D. Gissox The Rejected Manyscript, A Story FLIZABETH STUART PHELYS WARD. trated by C. 5. ReiniaT Teanyson, By Mes Jawes . Fisios Hlustrations by F. V. Du Moxo. The Unexpected G\lesu A Farce. By Wittiam Dean Howerrs, With Tiustra tions and Frontisplece by W.T. SWEDLEY. Lditor' By Mus- With fy and Editer's SUBSCRIPTION PRI wmarantee to curo lmn--r Brain Power, [anda % o by Wl BEFOKE AND A FTER USING, For Sale in Omaha by Sherman & | we | libraries of Easy As Can Be —washing with Pearline. rub, rub that made the old washboard None of the old washboard, either, shes, anything in the house— making you Tub it out. There's a saving in the labor—but, Desides that, there's a saving in the wear. W ashmq with acids and chemicals is easy, too— Washing with Pearline is. are Pearline is never peddied ; if your grocer sends you an imi- SAPOLIO LIKE A GOOD TEMPER SHEDS A The Gz-cnt Liver and Stomach Rctucdy ess, Fever, Piles, cte,, and renders DYSPEPSIA=— TWO GREAT SERIALS BEGIN IN Harper’s Tagazine for January HARPER & BROTHERS, Publishers, New York City. *Norve Seods,” the nuudv‘r{ul T y sold’ with g Lassitud i 10 S ks mones: Cumnnr Yrub. Addicas Nery o Boed Co.r Chlenson Al MONMDAY, DEOEMBER 26, 1802. tage, but the fin do siecle Johnnie likes ‘ to display a taper waist enswathed in o | well-fitting whintoont. The advantage is much more marked ‘ in evening dress, where the ‘‘camel band " has almost entively superseded walstconts, the former hiving & ten- | den to assume A patriarchal aspect when stretehod ovor a capacious abdo men. The late Duke of Clarence waa noted for the tight lacing ho indulged in, Lacing is said to have a beneficial effect upon men who are inclined to un- due at the table, as after the manner of the YIL‘IM'IH‘ bolt of the wostorn gentleman, “‘down on his luck, 1t puts a certain check on capacity excosses - - An Invaluable Remedy for Cold Sheriff Hardman of Tyler Virg almost prostrated wit when | using Chamberlain's peaking of it he says 1 find it county \n sale by - NOW IN DIRE POVERTY. Distress of an Author Who Has Dons for W Miss Virginia Ponny extremely straitened o Now York Much is now living in reumstances in She devoted the whole of her dost fortune, amounting to per hans #7.000, including jewels, to advance the interests of women, espeeially in the way of oponing up employments for them, 1t 15 more than thirty vears ago whon Miss Penny, now 65 ye old, bogun her work, the Boston Herald. She hind been a teacher and sho counted just six employments, which, so | far ns her knowledge went, were open to 1en. She thought there ought to be more and accordin hegan n patient and thorough study of the wvroblem, which extended over four years. bought books, searched in the veral cities and sentout | circulur inquirios to manufucturers and merchants. The resultof her 1n i tions was a large volume, som: statistical in nature, in which showed that there were 500 ments in which women might gaged. This work, ealled “Iimployment for Women,” was published 1 1863, Since that time women have become gaged in move than 450 of the employ- ments Miss Penny deseribed. The book went through several editions, appear- ing in two cases under cianged titles, Miss Penny published another book | “Think and Act,” in 187 1t also dealt with the problems which confront wo- men who are dependent upon them- | selves. | This lady spentall of her money in the | collection and publication of the facts i went into her books, and it is 1y admitted that her work has | been of great valuo to women. Sho is | n genuine distre Her bedstead | sts of four empty trunks. I11 health | revonts her from earning as much with her pen as she might if her strength | was greater. -— For a disorde liver try Beecham's Pills e A Cow With Ten 5. There is on exhibition at Paris, Tex,, onoof the greatest curiosities cver in America—a cow with ten horns, two on her head and two on each foot. = She is vears old and has had a fine calf. She was born near Jacksboro, Tex., her primal owner being & prominent ranch- man named Oliver. She is at present in charge of a man named Mauley. She will be shown at Chicago during the World’s fair. Gt G When in want of a good liniment, buy Sal va tion Oil, which ¢ Just it and see. None of the rub, common sense washing of t takes out the dirt, instead of It's a big difference. Peddlers and some unscrupulous gro- cers will tell you ** this is as good as" or “the same as Pearline.” IT'S 348 JAMES PYLE] New York, EVERYWHERE. Liver, Bowels Ieadache, Constipation, the system less | y tone up the internal socretions to it to perorm its functions. ed by RADWAY & 0O, 52 Warron Streot, Now THE R ES. By A. Coxan Doyie ustrated by I pe ThuLsTRUP, this Number ave The Old Way to Dixie. By JuLian With Drawiigs by W. T, SaEDLEY By P With llustrations by Kex Rarri Why we Left Russia. LOW Tiwow Proletarian Paris, By P. RENOUAKD. With Hlustrations by Pensions: the Law and its Admini tion. Dy Fowaro F. WAITE The Story of the Other Wise Man, Huxgy Vax Dvie Drawer, both Iustrated. CE, 4% A YEAR. an ol rvous ¢lsoases W k Me Wakotainoss. Lost Mentibod, Nighily Wil drain and loss of power of (he Goner by over exertion, yontbful ¢rrors, or mlianta which 800n 100 L0 Tnbruili TVCRIORS L0 carry in vost pocket. B by 785 oilor wa nive o arltten Juaranide (@ ciure McConnell, 1515 Dodge Streat, Kind fri (‘mls, We greet you. We are conscious that we have pl(‘usvd you. Most Heartily ve Greet You. A MERRY CHRISTMAS WE WIisSH YOoU. If we please ourselves as well in '93 as in '92, we can wish ourselves no better luck. We have done an enormous business and feel highly elated. fstmas Golumbia Glothin g Go Corner 13th and Farnam. Roll! Roll! Compel your Shoe Dealer to supply you with Rolled Edge Arctcs, L*:cluc‘l.ere Roll AND RUBBER BOOTS. The New Jersey '!uhber Shoe Co. MAKES NO RA CHARGE FOR ROLLED EDGEI. See the New % T'IES, They are fine. \nll\.c ne ()N SOLES. Dealers can get Price Lists and Dis« counts on application, I carry a big stock and ml Western Agent for the New Jersey Co. ZAGHARY T. LHNISE‘# Omaha, Neb. PURE RYE. s remarkable among whiskies for its Purity, Rich Quality, Smoothness and Delicious Bouguet. Sold only at High-class Drinking Places and Drug Stores. If your Dealer does not keep it in stock, ‘Write to DALLEMAND & CO.. For Thirty Days only wa will offar our entirs stock of Divnonds and ‘hristmas Jewelry and Silverware at less than mnvfacturer’s cost. Fourteenth and Farnam Straats. Wil move Jan. 1, to N CHICAGO. » W. Cor. 16th and Farnam, SAPES FOR SALE. DrDOWNS 1816 Douglas Strect, Omaha, Neb, [Tho eminent spociallst in nervous, chronle, priy id oertd . wm [ A rogular angd L1904, skin and urinary disease 1 roatost suo- p: Conauliution fras. Corrosp o 10 o Lays 10 mm. b0 12 o, coudstaip (OF replys

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